Findings will be significant in designing therapeutics for wound repair
An international team led by 杏吧视频 School of Medicine has discovered novel properties of the protein Gasdermin B that promotes repair of cells lining the gastrointestinal tract in people with chronic inflammatory disorders like Crohn鈥檚 disease and ulcerative colitis.
The new findings, recently published in the journal are significant because the impact of Gasdermin B (GSDMB) on healing epithelium鈥攁 type of body tissue that lines the organs that have direct contact with the external environment鈥攚ill play a key role in research on wound formation and designing novel therapeutics to enhance wound repair, said Theresa Pizarro, lead study author and the Louis Pillemer Professor of Experimental Pathology at the School of Medicine. In addition to medical school colleagues on campus, researchers included scientists from Cleveland Clinic, Texas, England and Greece.
Gasdermin B
Gasdermins are a family of proteins known to cause pyroptosis鈥攁 type of cell death usually triggered by infections and inflammation that contributes to conditions like ulcerative colitis and Crohn鈥檚 disease.
Within that protein family, Gasdermin B, unlike other gasdermin proteins, doesn鈥檛 cause pyroptosis, especially in epithelial cells, but instead contributes to keeping the gastrointestinal tract healthy鈥攁 significant discovery for the development of future therapeutic treatments.
Previous research has shown that individuals carrying genetic variations of Gasdermin B have an increased risk of developing inflammatory disorders like asthma or inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).
鈥淟ittle was known regarding the mechanisms of how this occurred,鈥 Pizarro said. 鈥淚n our studies, we uncovered the functional consequences of these GSDMB genetic variants."

鈥淪o, although IBD patients may produce higher levels of GSDMB when they have disease flares,鈥 she said, 鈥渢he GSDMB protein produced by the genetic variants interferes with the ability of epithelial cells to regenerate and form a healthy barrier critical to healing, for example, in ulcers of patients with ulcerative colitis.鈥
The study
The scientists analyzed samples from Crohn鈥檚 disease and ulcerative colitis patients using state-of-the-art techniques, such as single-cell RNA sequencing, CRISPR/Cas9 and epithelial organoid cultures. Results confirmed substantial increases of GSDMB in biopsies of those with IBD, particularly ulcerative colitis, when compared to levels of GSDMB found in healthy individuals.
The findings unexpectedly showed the lack of epithelial cell death due to GSDMB; instead, this increased level led to:
- Proliferation, or the growth of new cells;
- Migration, or the movement of cells;
- And decreased adhesion dynamics鈥攖he attractive forces between cells and other surfaces that affect motility.
Together, these processes promote restoration of the epithelial layer and effective wound-healing, Pizarro said.
鈥淔uture therapies targeting gasdermin B are not necessarily restricted to IBD or other chronic inflammatory states of the gastrointestinal tract,鈥 Pizarro said, 鈥渂ut also have far-reaching implications for effective wound-healing of the lungs, skin and other organs interfacing with the external environment that require maintenance of an efficient epithelial barrier.鈥
Pizarro credited 鈥渢his groundbreaking discovery on the collaborative and concerted efforts from immunologists, gastroenterologists, cell biologists and bioinformaticians from around the world,鈥 including from Oxford University, University of Athens, Baylor College of Medicine, UT Southwestern and her colleagues at Cleveland Clinic Lerner Research Institute and 杏吧视频.
For more information, contact Megan Hahn at Megan.hahn@case.edu.